Waikato Times

Authoritie­s: Emailed bomb threats ‘crude extortion attempt’

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A wave of bomb threats emailed yesterday to hundreds of schools, businesses and government buildings across the US triggered searches, evacuation­s and fear – but there were no signs of explosives, and authoritie­s said the scare appeared to be a crude extortion attempt.

Law enforcemen­t agencies across the country dismissed the threats, saying they were meant to cause disruption and compel recipients into sending money and were not considered credible.

Some of the emails had the subject line: ‘‘Think Twice.’’ They were sent from a spoofed email address. The sender claimed to have had an associate plant a small bomb in the recipient’s building and that the only way to stop him from setting it off was by making an online payment of $20,000 in Bitcoin.

‘‘We are currently monitoring multiple bomb threats that have been sent electronic­ally to various locations throughout the city,’’ the New York City Police Department’s counterter­rorism unit tweeted. ‘‘These threats are also being reported to other locations nationwide & are NOT considered credible at this time.’’

Other law enforcemen­t agencies also dismissed the threats, which were written in a choppy style reminiscen­t of the Nigerian prince email scam.

The Palm Beach County, Florida, sheriff’s office and the Boise, Idaho, police said they had no reason to believe that threats made to locations in those areas were credible. One of the emails wound up in a spam filter, Boise Police Chief William Bones said.

The FBI said it was assisting law enforcemen­t agencies dealing with the threats.

‘‘As always, we encourage the public to remain vigilant and to promptly report suspicious activities which could represent a threat to public safety,’’ the FBI said in a statement.

Across the country, some schools closed early and others were evacuated or placed on lockdown because of the hoax. Authoritie­s said a threat emailed to a school in Troy, Missouri, about 88km northeast of St Louis, was sent from Russia.

The bomb threats also prompted evacuation­s at city hall in Aurora, Illinois, the offices of the News & Observer in Raleigh, North Carolina, a suburban Atlanta courthouse and businesses in Detroit.

‘‘Organisati­ons nationwide, both public and private, have reported receiving emailed bomb threats today,’’ Michigan State Police spokeswoma­n Shannon Banner said. ‘‘They are not targeted toward any one specific sector.’’

Penn State University notified students via a text alert about threats to a half-dozen buildings and an airport on its main campus in State College, Pennsylvan­ia. In an update, the school said the threat appeared to be part of a ‘‘national hoax.’’

Officials at Columbine High School in Colorado were dealing yesterday with a bomb threat of a different sort.

Students were being kept inside for the rest of the school day after someone called in a bomb threat against the school.

The Jefferson County, Colorado, Sheriff’s Office said the caller claimed to have placed explosive devices in the school and to be hiding outside with a gun.

There is nothing to validate the threat was found at Columbine, where 12 students and a teacher were killed by two students in 1999, according to Sheriff’s spokesman Mike Taplin.

Two dozen other Colorado schools were also temporaril­y placed on lockout, meaning their doors were locked but classes continued normally, as the threat was investigat­ed. –AP

 ?? AP ?? San Francisco Police Captain Michelle Jean speaks to reporters about bomb threats sent to dozens of schools, universiti­es and other locations across the US.
AP San Francisco Police Captain Michelle Jean speaks to reporters about bomb threats sent to dozens of schools, universiti­es and other locations across the US.

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